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Ch. 22 Warm-Up 1. Compare and contrast natural selection vs. artificial selection. 2. What are the key ideas of natural selection? 3. Define and give an example for the following: Homologous structure Vestigial structure Analogous structure
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Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life Part B: Evidence for Evolution
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What you must know: Several examples of evidence for evolution. The difference between structures that are homologous and those that are analogous, and how this relates to evolution.
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Recap main ideas of natural selection: 1. Evolution is change in species over time. 2. There is overproduction of offspring, which leads to competition for resources. 3. Heritable variations exist within a population. 4. These variations can result in differential reproductive success. 5. Over generations, this can result in changes in the genetic composition of the population. Remember: Individuals do NOT evolve! Populations evolve.
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Review: Key Ideas of Natural Selection: 1. Competition for limited resources results in differential survival. 2. Evolutionary Fitness: Individuals with more favorable phenotypes more likely to survive and produce more offspring, and pass traits to future generations 3. If environment changes or individuals move to new environment, new adaptations and new species may arise. 4. Populations evolve, not individuals.
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Evidence for Evolution: 1. Direct Observations 2. Fossil Record 3. Homology 4. Biogeography
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Evidence for Evolution 1. Direct Observations2. Fossil Record 3. Homology4. Biogeography
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Evidence for Evolution: 1. Direct Observations Examples: Insect populations become resistant to pesticides (DDT) Antibiotic-resistant bacteria (MRSA) Peppered moth (pollution in city vs. country)
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The Rise of MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus)
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Evidence for Evolution: 2. Fossil Record Fossils = remains or traces of organisms from past Found in sedimentary rock Paleontology: study of fossils Show evolutionary changes that occur over time and origin of major new groups of organisms Ankle bones
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Prokaryotes (oldest fossils) eukaryotes (fish – amphibians – reptiles – birds – mammals) Transitional forms = links to modern species
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Evidence for Evolution: 3. Homology Homology: characteristics in related species can have underlying similarity even though functions may differ Examples: Homologous structures: similar anatomy from common ancestors (eg. forelimbs of human/cat/whale/bat) Embryonic homologies: similar early development (eg. vertebrate embryos with tail & pharyngeal pouches) Vestigial organs: structures w/little or no use (eg. flightless bird wings) Molecular homologies: similar DNA and amino acid sequences
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Homologous Structures
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Embryonic Development
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Vestigial Structures
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Molecular Homologies Compare DNA and amino acid sequences
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Evolutionary Tree
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Convergent Evolution Distantly related species can resemble one another Similar problem, similar solutions! Analogous structures: similar structures, function in similar environments Eg. Torpedo shape of shark, penguin, & dolphin
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Evidence for Evolution: 4. Biogeography Biogeography = geographic distribution of a species Species in nearby geographic areas resemble each other Continental drift and Pangaea explains similarities on different continents Endemic species: found at a certain geographic location and nowhere else Eg. Marine iguanas in the Galapagos
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Island Biogeography
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Galapagos Tortoises
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Tree of Life
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Rock Pocket Mice Running Time: 10:25 min
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